Anthony Albanese may have changed the way politics operates


AI Summary Hide AI Generated Summary

Economic Success

The article highlights the Australian government's success in managing the economy, with wages rising faster than inflation, contradicting predictions of a wage-price spiral.

Political Implications

This economic success is framed not only as effective economic management but also as a validation of Labor's broader political agenda, including industrial relations reforms and policies focused on higher wages in certain sectors.

Albanese's Strategic Approach

The article further suggests that Anthony Albanese's election victory reflects a broader shift in the political landscape. The success of a centrist approach is noted, with other parties subsequently choosing more centrist leaders.

  • The article posits that the election results indicate voters' preference for a stable and moderate approach.
  • It suggests that Albanese's political strategy resonated with the electorate, leading to a significant victory.
  • Other parties are responding to Albanese's success by shifting their own platforms towards the political center.
Sign in to unlock more AI features Sign in with Google

Political fights tend to provoke immediate sparks and media headlines. Quickly, triumphs and defeats are declared. Which can be a pity, because often the real victor isn’t clear until years down the track.

Last Wednesday, the government was able to celebrate new data showing wages continuing to rise – and faster than they were. With inflation trending down, this meant Labor could boast about a year and a half of wages rising faster than prices. Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the figures showed “just how spectacularly wrong some people have been when they’ve talked about fears of a wage-price spiral in our economy”.

Illustration by Joseph Benke.Credit:

These were strong words from Chalmers – but entirely fair. There have been quite a few warnings since Labor came to power about the dangers of wage hikes pushing prices up even further – from the Coalition, business groups, economists and the Reserve Bank.

It’s important to recognise this is not only an argument about Labor’s day-to-day economic management – itself a crucial political battleground. It also takes in Labor’s changes to industrial relations laws with their intended effect on wages and the government’s push for higher wages in care sectors. So this is a proxy battle over Labor’s broader agenda.

Of course, the economists can comfort themselves with the fact that just because the wage-price spiral didn’t happen doesn’t mean it couldn’t have happened. Warnings can be reasonable even when the danger doesn’t materialise. Politicians, though, have to make and test their bets in real time. On this one, Chalmers and his colleagues have earned the right to crow.

Loading

Which is the theme of the moment. There are, for example, arguments to be had about exactly why the government won the election in such spectacular fashion. And such arguments – including just how much influence Donald Trump had – are important, because of the lessons Labor takes into this term. In the end, though, unlike most of us, Anthony Albanese had to test whatever theories he had on polling day. Obviously, that test worked out pretty well for him.

It’s clear, too, from the way the other parties are operating that they think Albanese has tapped into something broader going on.

At the election, voters clung to the centre. Slow-and-steady Labor did well, the Greens and the increasingly right-wing Liberal Party were punished. In response, the Liberals, Nationals and Greens have all chosen leaders closer to the centre than some of the alternatives.

Was this article displayed correctly? Not happy with what you see?

Tabs Reminder: Tabs piling up in your browser? Set a reminder for them, close them and get notified at the right time.

Try our Chrome extension today!


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.
Earn points from views and
referrals who sign up.
Learn more

Facebook

Save articles to reading lists
and access them on any device


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.
Earn points from views and
referrals who sign up.
Learn more

Facebook

Save articles to reading lists
and access them on any device